"American Dream Builders." Nate Berkus hosts, as 12 designers and builders square off for home renovation projects in a new competition series. (NBC, 8 p.m.)

Tuesday

"Wild Things with Dominic Monaghan." The "Lost" star travels across four continents for a second season in search of large, intense creatures. (BBC America, 10 p.m.)

"Story of the Jews." This five-part series follows noted historian/author Simon Schama as he explores the Jewish experience from ancient times to the present day. (PBS, 8 p.m.)

Thursday

"Surviving Jack." Christopher Meloni stars as Jack Dunlevy, a military doctor whose wife returns to school. Jack takes over the parenting job to his two teenage kids. (Fox, 9:30 p.m.)

March 30

"Call the Midwife." Drama takes viewers to East London, 1959, for season three. (PBS, 8 p.m.)

"Mr. Selfridge." Jeremy Piven returns as the founder of London's Selfridge's department store for season two, as the store celebrates its fifth anniversary. (PBS, 9 p.m.)

March 31

"How I Met Your Mother." The story of how Ted Mosby meets his children's mother wraps up after nine seasons and 208 episodes. (CBS, 8 p.m.)

"Friends with Better Lives." Six friends at different stages in their lives -- married, divorced, newly engaged and single -- are outwardly happy, but secretly questioning if their friends have it better. (CBS, 9 p.m. Then moving to Mondays at 8:30 p.m.)

April 1

"The Mindy Project." Look for Anna Gunn and Bill Hader among the guest stars when the show returns from hiatus. (Fox, 9 p.m.)

"Inside Amy Schumer." Stand-up comic Amy Schumer explores topics revolving around sex, relationships and life in general through a series of scripted vignettes, jokes and man-on-the-street interviews. (Comedy Central, 10:30 p.m.)

April 4

"Unforgettable." Poppy Montgomery returns for a third season as a detective who is able to remember every moment of her life. (CBS, 8 p.m.)

"MTV Movie Awards." Always a crazy night, there are sure to be golden popcorn trophies and many stars. (MTV, 9 p.m.)

"Nurse Jackie" (Showtime, 9 p.m.). Edie Falco returns as a pill addict in the drama. Immediately following will be the final season of David Duchovny's "Californication" (Showtime, 9:30 p.m.).

"Mad Men." The first of two final seven-episode seasons begins. (AMC, 10 p.m.)

April 14

"Warehouse 13." A six-episode wrap-up of the series about agents who protect the government's secret storehouse of supernatural and mystical artifacts. (Syfy, 9 p.m.)

April 15

"Awkward." Season four returns with new showrunners, and more complications for Jenna, now a senior. (MTV, 10 p.m.)

"Fargo." A 10-episode adaptation of the Oscar-winning film features a story with the humor that made the movie a classic. Billy Bob Thorton heads a cast that includes Colin Hanks, Bob Odenkirk, Oliver Platt, Kate Walsh and Adam Goldberg. (FX, 10 p.m.)

"Last Week Tonight With John Oliver." A mainstay on "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" gets his own show. (HBO, 11 p.m.)

April 29

"Playing House." Starring Jessica St. Clair and Lennon Parham, the comedy focuses on two childhood friends who wind up reconnecting as their lives crumble. (USA, 10 p.m.)

May 5

"24: Live Another Day." Jack Bauer returns and is in exile in London. Run, Jack, run. (Fox, 8 p.m.)

May 11

"Penny Dreadful." In eight episodes of creepiness in this "frightening psychosexual thriller," some of literature's most famously terrifying characters come to life. They include including Dr. Frankenstein, Dorian Gray and iconic figures from the novel "Dracula." Josh Hartnett and Timothy Dalton star. (Showtime, 10 p.m.)

May 22

"Labyrinth." This four-hour miniseries jumps back and forth between modern and medieval France as it follows the lives of two women who are separated by centuries, but united in their search for the Holy Grail. (CW, Thursday and Friday at 8 p.m.)

May 20

"Gang Related." Ramon Rodriguez plays a rising star in Los Angeles' elite Gang Task Force. But things get sticky for him because he was once a member of a powerful gang. (Fox, 9 p.m.)

May 25

"The Normal Heart." Mark Ruffalo, Matt Bomer, Taylor Kitsch, Jim Parsons and Julia Roberts head the cast in this adaptation of the Tony Award-winning play that tells the story of the onset of the HIV-AIDS crisis in New York City in the early 1980s. (HBO, 9 p.m.)